Somehow, it feels horrifying to use something that high-level for the backend, especially when MediaWiki has so much PHP and the WMF has so many PHP programmers. Maybe my adolescent arse is getting old…
[He/Him, Nosist, Touch typist, Enthusiast, Superuser impostorist, keen-eyed humorist, endeavourOS shillist, kotlin useist, wonderful bastard, professinal pedant miser]
Stuped person says stuped things, people boom
I have trouble with using tone in my words but not interpreting tone from others’ words. Weird, isn’t it?
Formerly on kbin.social and dbzer0
Somehow, it feels horrifying to use something that high-level for the backend, especially when MediaWiki has so much PHP and the WMF has so many PHP programmers. Maybe my adolescent arse is getting old…
Wikifunctions finally exposed running functions via API in March, though yeah, it’s still a long, long way from being integrated in wikis, not to mention the arcane parameter that is passing a JSON via URL. (and hopefully you meant Wikifunctions and not Wikidata lol)
“No longer open source” is factually true. However, it gives the impression that they did something much more drastic. It would be much better to just get to the point with something like “draw.io forbids competitors for Atlassian integration from using their code”.
TL;DR: Competitors in integrating with Atlassian are not allowed to incorporate code after the change because they used it in free add-ons, which caused the official integration (a paid add-on that is the sole source of funding) to be labeled a scam.
Plus, the thing was never really open source anyway:
draw.io is also closed to contributions, as it’s not open source. We follow a development process compliant with our SOC 2 Type II process. We do not have a mechanism where we can accept contributions from non-staff members.
Apache is a permissive license, plus:
draw.io is also closed to contributions, as it’s not open source. We follow a development process compliant with our SOC 2 Type II process. We do not have a mechanism where we can accept contributions from non-staff members.
This was added wayyyy before. OP is making this much more of a deal than it actually is.
You do realize virtually none of this development in isolationism was around in 2008?
The CSAC also accused Intel of embedding a backdoor “in almost all” of its CPUs since 2008
Hmmm They couldn’t be referring to the extensively researched, reverse-engineered, and years-documented Intel Management Engine, could they?
CSAC is only just now coming across this information? Better late than never, I guess.
Edit: Having now finished the article, yes they are.
Man has consumer protection been kicking ass since Biden’s Lina Khan
Yeah, my point being Guilded was always proprietary and never hostable.
I think you confused Revolt and Guilded. Guilded is the proprietary one developed by Roblox.
note that the blobs aren’t unknown, they’re builds of submodules that the developer hopefully hasn’t added malware to
It’s productive because it gives free website operators revenue
… and bypass such sandboxing?
They wanted to, and Qualcomm’s board blocked it. They tried to go forward anyway, and Trump stopped them in 2017.
Zen’s vertical tab bar seems like they coded it themselves.
why lol
and Firefox is built on Firefox. think it through
you can either expand the tabs or middle-click them. i do wonder what the ideal solution would be
It’s quite independent from Wikidata. It’s an alpha-stage programming functions repository.